



Time in the studio to concentrate and give good performances. Ruben sounds considerably better here than he did on Soulful - the voice doesnt sound rushed or thin, it sounds like he had the Its all easy-rolling, smooth, and polished slow grooves, sometimes easingīy on the sound of the record, other times gelling quite nicely thanks to some sturdily written and arranged songs. Kelly - and while there are a number of cooks in the kitchen, the resulting album, I Need an Angel, winds up being cohesive since its all coming from the same perspective. His first album, 2003s Soulful, was pitched toward an urban soul audience, and an urban contemporary gospel album is a natural extension of that attitude, since the basic sound isnt all that far removed: the slow, smooth grooves are an uncanny ringer for the sound of quiet storm, only with a religious spin. But the scrappy singer revived herself yet again in 2010 with a new album, another Color Purple run and a reality show.Ruben Studdard I Need An Angel Mp3 Download Musicpleer By louacampliphan1986 Follow | Public Not long after, however, Fantasia faced a new set of problems, including fans' ire and lost ticket sales after missed Color Purple performances (which turned out to be due to a cyst on her vocal cords), spiraling debt and her record label dropping her. Her self-titled sophomore album dropped later that year, followed by a 2007 star turn as Celie in the Broadway musical The Color Purple. She chronicled her struggles to reach the top as a young single mother in the 2006 book Life Is Not a Fairy Tale, which was later turned into a Lifetime television movie (starring Fantasia as herself). Despite her successes, life has not always been easy for Fantasia. Her debut album, Free Yourself, dropped in 2004 and earned several Grammy nods. Sixty-five million people voted for her, leading to her record deal with Clive Davis' J Records.

This young singer from North Carolina went from unknown teenager to worldwide superstar after winning the third season of American Idol.
